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#342573 - 03/23/12 11:44 AM
Re: Video of vArranger with a MIDI guitar !!
[Re: Dnj]
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Senior Member
Registered: 01/02/04
Posts: 7305
Loc: Lexington, Ky, USA
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Donny, capos have uses. They are great for acoustic players who need an open bass note in an accompanying setting ("pickin and grinnin").
You will NEVER (or rarely) see a competent lead player using a capo. That generally is the sign of an amateur who simply does not know who to play power chords, or a "picker and grinner" who uses the same basic fingering and a capo to put songs in an appropriate key.
I would bet that the players you see using capos are NOT instrumentalists, but singers who accompany themselves on acoustic guitar. And I'll bet, if you look closely, there is a player on the bandstand doing all the hard parts without a capo.
I have 300 plus guitars and wouldn't be caught dead using a capo...don't even own one, even though I sometimes use one in a studio to use open bass acoustic chords on backing tracks.
I think on the piece I posted last year, I played in 5 or six keys...no capo and probably only one open bass note. But that has as much to do with my style of solo playing than anything else. And, frankly, I choose to play in, say B flat instead of A (one fret down to an open A) because I can (LOL).
Generally, except for the acoustic player needing the open bass note on relatively simple songs, pros just shake their heads and smile when they see a capo.
Russ
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#342579 - 03/23/12 01:12 PM
Re: Video of vArranger with a MIDI guitar !!
[Re: bruno123]
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Senior Member
Registered: 01/02/04
Posts: 7305
Loc: Lexington, Ky, USA
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Donny, you have your right to an opinion, but here, we couldn't disagree more.
That's OK...that's what makes the world go round.
I'm making a point that, when it comes to all things guitar, I can make a claim of being somewhat of an authority.
And I'll bet if you ask accomplished guitarists, you'd hear the same thing from the great majority of them.
Our differences go way beyond just capos. I don't use or even listen to players who use tracks of any kind, and recently stopped using arrangers for "live" performance. You'll NEVER see a laptop on my bandstand.
Different strokes, for sure. And I'm not implying that there is any high road here. There is only what's right for each individual.
Just for curiosity, check out the capo thing with real players. And listen carefully to the playing and level of difficulty of the material played by those who use them.
They generally are self accompanists; not soloists or players of tunes with more than three chords or so.
But, I enjoy some of their performances. It's just not what you'd hear on my bandstand.
Be well (hope your eyes are better).
Russ
Dan, you're right...the gentleman ROCKS; understands the equipment and was demonstrating it; not necessarily trying to dazzle anyone with his playing. I bet the capo was to put chords in his vocal range with a strong open bass note (eg, a capo at the 4th fret would make a C chord an E flat). There are lots of midi guitars; he chose one of the best. He knows what he's doing. COOL DUDE! R.
Edited by captain Russ (03/23/12 01:21 PM)
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